Colon Cancer Research - Causes, Treatment, Symptoms

Colon Cancer Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Colon Cancer, including details on causes, treatment, symptoms.


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Tumor-to-tumor metastasis to a thyroid follicular adenoma as the initial presentation of a colonic adenocarcinoma.

Fadare O, Parkash V, Fiedler PN, Mayerson AB, Asiyanbola B

Department of Pathology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06504, USA. oluwolefadare@yahoo.com

The incidence of thyroid involvement by metastatic disease from distant organs ranges from an average of 3.1% in surgical series to 5.3% in autopsy series. However, the metastasis of one tumor into another (traditionally referred to as 'tumor-to-tumor metastasis') is distinctly uncommon. Typically, they are identified as new manifestations or necropsy findings of a known, pre-existing donor tumor. Herein is described the case of a 59-year-old woman whose thyroid nodule (a follicular adenoma) was resected and found to contain foci of a well-differentiated adenocarcinoma with a morphologic and immunohistochemical profile consistent with origination from the lower gastrointestinal tract. Subsequent diagnostic work-up revealed a sigmoid colon tumor with metastases to the liver. This is, to the authors' knowledge, the first reported example of a colon adenocarcinoma whose initial clinical manifestation was a metastasis to a thyroid neoplasm and only the third reported example of a colonic adenocarcinoma metastatic to a thyroid tumor. In a review of previously reported examples of tumor-to-tumor metastases involving a thyroid neoplasm as the recipient, the following features were present in the majority: (i) multifocality of the metastatic tumor aggregates; (ii) a total lack of, or only minimal amounts of reaction (desmoplastic, inflammatory or myxoid) of the recipient tumor to the metastatic deposits; and (iii) retention of the histopathologic characteristics of the donor tumor in the metastatic deposits. In general, strikingly divergent morphologic features in an otherwise typical thyroid neoplasm should elicit a differential diagnosis that takes into consideration the possibility of metastasis.

Published 6 September 2005 in Pathol Int, 55(9): 574-9.
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